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Today's poem is "Nycticorax olsoni"
from Ecology of the Afterlife

Split Rock Press

Nathan Manley is a writer and erstwhile English teacher from Loveland, Colorado. He is the author of two chapbooks, Numina Loci (Mighty Rogue Press, 2018) and Ecology of the Afterlife (Split Rock Press, 2021). Recent poems and Latin translations have appeared or are forthcoming in Portland Review, Natural Bridge, Spillway, Crab Creek Review, THINK, The Classical Outlook and others. His work has been nominated for Best of the Net and a Pushcart Prize.

Other poems by Nathan Manley in Verse Daily:
January 9, 2017:   "Raise" "I need a safe house everywhere I go...."

Books by Nathan Manley:

Other poems on the web by Nathan Manley:
"Fragment on a Lark's Song"
Two poems
"Cape Elizabeth, October"
Two poems

Nathan Manley's Website.

About Ecology of the Afterlife:

"In Ecology of the Afterlife, Nathan Manley makes what is extinct once again extant; each poem is a living, breathing, moving diorama. Backed by sound research, we hear several voices in this poetry: Darwin's, in the telling of natural histories; in critical attention to detail, Audubon's; and as Afterlife is eco-writing at its lyrical heart, echoes of Leopold, of his land ethic and his appreciation for the 'house' of nature and the flora and fauna—flesh and bone, stem, flower, and leaf—that live in and depend upon it. Ironically, these poems composed with such tangible sensory detail are about vanishings, yet implicit is Manley's message that as these particular species have disappeared, so goes the whole environment. And though we are immersed in the lives, deaths, and imaginative afterlives of these organisms, fixed in historical place among exotic landscapes, shaped, held, and banished by the inscrutable laws of evolution and the dangerously precarious precipice the modern world has put the planet on, despite these scientific, factual, and cautionary underpinnings, because Manley's love of the natural world is distilled in impeccable form, we never, ever forget we are reading beautiful, often elegiac, verse."
—Brian Palmer

"How do we understand our current relationship to extinction? How do we account for what is gone due to our own, human hands? These poems by Nathan Manley harness the tradition of scientific illustration (which itself insists upon a measure of observational time, given the hours and minutes that any viewer knows must be behind each drawing) to offer fragments of what remains from those irrevocably gone: skulls, wings, and inflorescences point us to the actuality of beings, as well as their meanings to the artist, but can never give us those beings and the artist in the same space and time. Read these poems to learn vivid details; having read them and considered their details, past/present, art/history and so many other false dichotomies are revealed."
—Elizabeth Bradfield



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